Commonwealth Competition Reform Payments to States and Territories Amount to Approximately $450m
November 3, 2000New Chairman and Deputy Chair for the Australian Securities and Investments Commission
November 9, 2000
NO.104
Morgan and Banks Survey: Near Total Opposition to Labor Rollback The Morgan and Banks survey reported in the Sunday Telegraph today was in fact released on Tuesday last week embargoed for Wednesday’s papers and reported at that time. Accompanying the release on profitability were three other press releases. They were as follows: (i) “Australia Wins Gold Again” finding that a record number of businesses will be hiring permanent staff in the next quarter (ii) “No Worries for November GST Payments” indicating only 12 per cent of employers were worried about cashflow in meeting GST payments (iii) “GST Rollback Not Appropriate” showing a resounding 90.5 per cent of businesses oppose Labor’s rollback policy. What these surveys show is that overwhelmingly businesses are coping with the introduction of GST – they are not worried about cashflow and employment is booming. They also confirm that business may well have absorbed profit margins to keep prices down for consumers. This is good news for consumers and consistent with the lower than expected September quarter CPI result. Since overall company profits are at record highs, businesses may have taken the opportunity to preserve market share and consumer goodwill. Labor’s claim that business viability is threatened is completely false. As the survey itself shows employment intentions are booming. The most revealing part of the survey was the near total opposition to Labor’s rollback – a massive 90.5 per cent – making rollback one of the most unpopular policies in Federal political history. No wonder Labor keeps it hidden. If Labor had any intention of rollback on GST it should announce it now so people can assess it, and in particular assess Labor’s plan for higher tax and higher interest rates to pay for it. Labor’s shame and embarrassment over rollback is proven by the fact that it is going to such extreme lengths to cover up its policies. 5 November 2000 |